ABSTRACT

On the brink of bankruptcy in the 1970s, New York City has been restored as a center of economic and cultural vitality in the 1980s. But it has also become an increasingly brutal place, where incivility reigns, drugs lace the streets, and crime is so pervasive that most New Yorkers now consider it a permanent fixture, like gray skies and impossible traffic. What is it that continues to draw people to this city of contradictions?Born and educated in New York, Herbert London knows this city of dreams as few do. The Broken Apple is based on his keen observations of New York's social, political, and cultural life over the critical decade of the 1980s. London examines the city's continuing failures, including a city administration unable to meet the most basic citizen needs or to assure safety and security. He sees schools that have become mean-spirited, with teachers unable to teach, administrators unable to maintain order, and students unable to learn. He describes the new slaves of New York as those in search of a place to live, in a city where housing is in shorter supply than in any other major city in the nation. London asks why, despite all this, everything is bigger than life in New York, and finds the answer in New York's role as the nation's communications hub and the measuring rod by which other cities are judged.London writes with knowledgeable affection about this very special place, where the mundane is freely converted into the metaphorical. His book is an excursion, a guide to what is good, what is bad, and what is awful in the city. It is a montage of the years of Mayor Koch, the period many have described as the city's fin de siecle. But it is also a perscriptive book, pointing out what can be done in practical ways to improve life.The Broken Apple will be of interest to urban specialists as well as those for whom New York is an aspiration or a reality. Like the city itself, the book has something for everyone, from visions of political corruption to acts of redemption. Above all, it captures the pulsating rhythm of this unique city

part I|40 pages

Cultural Life in the City

chapter 2|2 pages

Changing Our Street Names

chapter 14|2 pages

New York's Lost Civility

part II|34 pages

Politics

chapter 20|2 pages

The Cable TV Fiasco

chapter 25|2 pages

A Justification for Firings

chapter 27|2 pages

New York's Socialist Ethos

chapter 29|2 pages

Reformers on the March

chapter 32|2 pages

The Politics of Cynicism

part III|32 pages

Urban Economics

chapter 37|2 pages

Plenty of Jobs for Teenagers

chapter 38|2 pages

Put Cork on the Bottle Law

chapter 41|2 pages

Developers Are Not Devils

chapter 43|2 pages

The Housing Mess in New York

chapter 47|2 pages

Public-Private Partnership

chapter 48|2 pages

Inauthentic Brooklyn Beer

part V|45 pages

Crime

chapter 66|2 pages

Washington Square Park Redux

chapter 68|2 pages

Extending Judicial Power

chapter 73|2 pages

A New Look at the Goetz Case